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That 66% number



Just how stupid and economically illiterate Indians are, and how wise and benevolent the political class is can best be captured by a single figure, the number 66. A little over 66% of Indians, the latest Census tells us, have access to electricity; a little under 66% (63.2% actually) are able to find enough money to pay for a mobile phone each month—this figure is up from just 9.1% a decade ago; yet 66% of Indians remain so dirt poor, they need to be given 5 kg of wheat and rice...
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With China, keep it real



The Chinese premier Li Keqiang's visit to India this week is a good moment to inject much-needed realism into Delhi's China policy. Through the second term of the UPA government, Delhi has allowed ideological romanticism and political timidity to overwhelm common sense in dealing with China. Worse still is the relentless mystification of Chinese policies. Consider the recent psycho-babble in Delhi about the logic behind China's Depsang intrusion.
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Congress govt, Janata cabinet: What a ‘clean’ sweep!



In the sea of khadi-clad politicians at the Raj Bhavan’s glass house on Saturday, where a handful of the faithful had gathered to witness a Congress government take charge of Karnataka after a gap of nine long years, instead of the mad euphoria that marked the unexpectedly huge victory for the Congress party only days before, there was a palpable sense of unease, a sense of missed opportunities. You couldn’t put your finger on it. But there it was.
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Dirty medicine



On the morning of Aug. 18, 2004, Dinesh Thakur hurried to a hastily arranged meeting with his boss at the gleaming offices of Ranbaxy Laboratories in Gurgaon, India, 20 miles south of New Delhi. It was so early that he passed gardeners watering impeccable shrubs and cleaners still polishing the lobby's tile floors. As always, Thakur was punctual and organized. He had a round face and low-key demeanor, with deep-set eyes that gave him a doleful appearance. His boss, Dr. Rajinder Kumar, Ranbaxy's head of research and development...
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Decadence rules over purge in IPL



Cricket's secret society known for its opacity has seen many trials and tribulations over the years. Loved and reviled equally by savants and cassandras, it has finally exploded in the BCCI's face. The existence of a private cosy club within the cricket establishment had to become a problem child. A problem child which paid in spades and became a cash register for the cricket board. Why was it a problem child from the very beginning? Simply because, a parallel power centre built on the edifice of private enterprise...
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Time for a new stance on Tibet



The recent Chinese incursion into India, the long stand-off , the fear and fury surrounding the brazen episode and the eventual resolution once again raises an old question : What about Tibet? India's security is directly linked to Tibet, as Lobsang Sangay, the prime minister of Tibet's government-in-exile , told a Washington audience last week and he is right. "When China says that Tibet is one of the core issues, all the more (reason ) that India should say, Tibet is a core issue...
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The worst Washington scandal since Watergate



We are in the midst of the worst Washington scandal since Watergate. The reputation of the Obama White House has, among conservatives, gone from sketchy to sinister, and, among liberals, from unsatisfying to dangerous. No one likes what they're seeing. The Justice Department assault on the Associated Press and the ugly politicization of the Internal Revenue Service have left the administration's credibility deeply, probably irretrievably damaged. They don't look jerky now, they look dirty. The patina of high-mindedness...
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Lead Story
Politics/Nation
Amit Shah given charge of U.P. - B Muralidhar Reddy, Hindu
2G scam: How roles reversed in the two parliamentary committees - Pradeep Kaushal, Indian Express
Congress to struggle in Bihar, Maharashtra, Delhi, UP: survey - Anuja, Mint
In Lalu's Muslim anxiety, Nitish holds the edge - Santosh Singh, Indian Express
At 45°C, crowd hails Modi’s speech in Chhattisgarh - Mohua Chatterjee, Times of India
Congress govt, Janata cabinet: What a ‘clean’ sweep! - Neena Gopal, Deccan Chronicle
Judge Cyriac of NHRC fame gave 10 verdicts in 1,300 days - Navtan Kumar, Sunday Guardian
‘Modi magic’ takes Chhattisgarh by storm - Rabindra Nath Choudhury, Asian Age
Mamata: Two years, too little - Subrata Nagchoudhury, Indian Express
Cong's Jharkhand dream may crash as CBI seeks to prosecute eight MLAs - Rahul Tripathi, Indian Express
Was Sudipta Sen’s muckraking howl a TMC ploy to tarnish the President? - SNM Abdi, Outlook India
D-Company's money-bunny trap for players - Pramod Kumar Singh, Pioneer
Naveen's Roman script speech goes viral, draws flak - Debabrata Mohanty, IE
Sonia Gandhi: The leader who never delivered? - FirstPost
Collateral clean-up - Mihir Srivastava, Open
Indian politics and its Lalu Prasad Yadav syndrome - Vivek Kaul, FirstPost
The ‘incestuous relationship’ between Congress and media - FirstPost
Is Nitish now receptive to UPA? - Mukesh Ranjan, Asian Age
Advertising blitz can't hide UPA's failures - Kalyani Shankar, Pioneer
It pays to be a sycophant - Anuradha Dutt, Pioneer
BJP opposes Cyriac Joseph's appointment to NHRC - Times of India
Odisha CM's Odia speech written in English goes viral, ridiculed - Ashok Pradhan, Times of India
Spot-fixing in IPL: Dawood's man in Dubai mastermind of betting racket - C Unnikrishnan & Raj Shekhar, Times of India
Opinion/Editorials
Another forgettable milestone for UPA - Anil Padmanabhan, Mint
The Prime Minister's position is untenable - Balbir Punj, Pioneer
Support vs procurement - Business Standard
That 66% number - Sunil Jain, Financial Express
Hampi’s past awaits a future - Hindu
Charting the course of Sino-Indian relations - Anurag Viswanath, Financial Express
From Sebi to SEC - Financial Express
With China, keep it real - C. Raja Mohan, Indian Express
It's time for the BJP to say 'Modi for PM' - Diptosh Majumdar, DNA
Silence of the vultures - MJ Akbar, Sunday Guardian
From Manmohan-vintage rouble scam to Narendrabhai's 'ethical incapacities' - T J S George, NewIndianExpress
Winning the waiting game in Pakistan - MJ Akbar, Times of India
Congress spot fixing economics, bets on sops to win it votes - Shankkar Aiyar, NewIndianExpress
Indian Payola League - Ashok Malik, Asian Age
BJP needs to get its message right - Swapan Dasgupta, Pioneer
Nawaz Sharif is the best bet for New Delhi - Kanchan Gupta, Pioneer
Socialist residue - Tavleen Singh, Indian Express
The idea of Pakistan - Meghnad Desai, Indian Express
Evolving out of inefficient corruption - SA Aiyar, Times of India
Decadence rules over purge in IPL - Sandeep Bamzai, Mail Today
Does the system need change? - Gautam Adhikari, Times of India
Can a caged parrot sing? - Bharat Karnad, NewIndianExpress
This way to Chindia - Hu Shisheng, Outlook India
It's 1973 all over again - Victor Davis Hanson, Tribune Media Services
For online free speech - Mint
Optimistic foreigners - TN Ninan, Business Standard
Business/Economy
Where's the coal? - Subir Gokarn, Business Standard
Our Chinese menu keeps growing - Nayanima Basu, Business Standard
Big deal: Obama’s shale gas decision is a huge opportunity for India - Seema Sirohi, FirstPost
How India should reform its trade for the 21st century - Jayanta Roy, Business Standard
Revamp Indian Railways - SN Mathur, NewIndianExpress
Wonder why arms dealers thrive in India? - Sruthijith K K, EconomicTimes
Wonder why arms dealers thrive in India? - Sruthijith KK, Economic Times
Rating the ‘raters’ - Ramnath Pradeep, Business Line
Madhya Pradesh goes the Gujarat way for power - Jyoti Mukul, Business Standard
Crossholding in same telecom circle may go - Surajeet Das Gupta & Aditi Phadnis, Business Standard
The argumentative economists - Mihir S Sharma, Business Standard
How the Indian economy is losing competitiveness - Niranjan Rajadhyaksha, Mint
Private universities: Creating another entry barrier - TV Mohandas Pai, FE
Procurement plunge casts shadow over food Bill - Sandip Das, Financial Express
Drug pricing order hits few, helps many - Financial Express
After telecom licences and coal blocks, will bank licences be the next cash cow for the UPA? - Mythili Bhusnurmath, Economic Times
National Pension System subscribers earn double digit return in 2012-13 - ET
HSBC signals 14,000 job cuts in $3-bn savings plan - Business Standard
Empty malls reflect the hollowness of India story - Ravi Teja Sharma & Vijaya Rathore, Economic Times
Manufacturing: Getting to the 25% mark - Nirvikar Singh, Financial Express
The Neighbourhood/World
End of the electables? - Cyril Almeida, Deccan Chronicle
The third coming: Peace in the air - Neena Gopal, Deccan Chronicle
Govt mulls action against Indians fishing in Lankan waters - Subodh Ghildiyal & Indrani Bagchi, Times of India
The worst Washington scandal since Watergate - Peggy Noonan, WSJ
Pakistan: A white tiger tale - Mariana Baabar, Outlook India
Anti-India demons haven't gone away - Hiranmay Karlekar, Pioneer
A myth that can devastate Tibet - Maura Moynihan, Rangzen
Changing class in America - Deepak Lal, Business Standard
Seize the Chinese moment - Srinath Raghavan, Business Line
Let’s accept stapled visas: Arunachal leader - Hindu
Senate approves Chandigarh-born Srinivasan's nomination to a top US court - Times of India
Indian origin students dominate Intel Fair in Phoenix - R Ravikanth Reddy, Hindu
PTI and PPP: What went wrong? - Raza Habib Raja, Pak Tea House
Wanted, an Afghan statesman - Vivek Katju, Hindu
In Sri Lanka, a new divide brings back old fears - Meera Srinivasan, Hindu
Nextdoor Nepal: Widening the credibility deficit - Yubaraj Ghimire, Indian Express
Onset of woes casts pall over Obama’s policy aspirations - Peter Baker, NYT
Obama's dangerous new narrative - Alexander Burns & John F Harris, Politico
 
Interviews/Profiles
A very sharif Nawaz , Nawaz Sharif  - Hindustan Times

‘A really serious playwright’ , Girish Karnad  - Hindu

He blew the whistle on Ranbaxy , Dinesh Thakur  - Times of India


Crash landing , Gorur Ramaswamy Gopinath  - BusinessStandard

I've always stuck to mandate , Vinod Rai, Comptroller and Auditor General, India  - Economic Times

The boy who never grew up , S Sreesanth  - Hindu



From fashion to AirAsia, Chandilya takes a flying leap , Mittu Chandilya, AirAsia India CEO  - Financial Express


Pakistan’s comeback kid , Nawaz Sharif  - Brookings

The man who blew the whistle and walked away with $49 mn , Dinesh Thakur  - Business Standard



 

Verbatim

There was for years an old "social contract" between politicians and business. This provided for complex rules and regulations that made it impossible to do business honestly in many fields. But it was possible to do business dishonestly, through pay-offs . Some called this "efficient corruption" : politicians took money and delivered clearances. However, the anti-corruption mood of the courts, and new fears of getting caught (like Pawan Bansal) have ended "efficient corruption" . Politicians may still take money but not deliver on clearances , what some call "inefficient corruption" that freezes investment and growth. The old social contract has broken down.
Swaminathan SA Aiyar
 

Lens Blogs

Katju is an affront to Press Council norms; must go -What would you call it when the chairman of the media’s watchdog panel, the Press Council of India, brazenly violates the ‘Norms of Journalistic Conduct’ enunciated by the very same body? more ››
A crisis going waste -INDEPENDENT INDIA HAS found itself backed into serious crisis several times in the past (political, economic and national security crises)... more ››
 
Split with Nitish will only boost BJP in Bihar -
K Balakrishnan, LensOnNews

WITH THE BJP seemingly decided on projecting Narendra Modi as its PM candidate and its close ally Nitish Kumar of JD(U) equally firm in his opposition to the idea, a split in the NDA alliance looks inevitable; most observers think it’s not a question of if, but when.

Trending Topics

 
 

Editor's Picks

Double whammy strikes the UPA and negates Karnataka victory - Sandeep Bamzai, Mail Today
A climate of India-baiting: Liberals love to deride George Bush, but Barack Obama's record is much worse - Jagdish Bhagwati, Times of India
A Hindu hell on earth: Families are being torn apart by their desperation to flee persecution in Pakistan - Andrew Buncombe, Independent
UPA II will be felled by people anger - Sandeep Bamzai, Mail Today
Anwar is on song in Malaysia - MJ Akbar, Sunday Guardian
 
LensOnNews, Opinion
LensOnElections

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Soft News

90-yr-old’s 1 lakh books in Karnataka a global hit

Atop an idyllic green hill overlooking Gokarna beach in Karnataka, a 90-year-old priest and former theatre costume designer carefully dusts the 30 bookcases and assorted boxes that house his collection of 1 lakh religious and secular texts. It’s a library that Ganapathy Vedeshwar has painstakingly built up over 74 years, from one small shelf to a 5,000-sq-ft building...
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Newspaper vendor from Bangalore walks into IIM-Calcutta

As the alarm goes off at 4am, N Shiva Kumar is up on his feet, stacking his bicycle with newspapers. He has to deliver them before the sun appears on the horizon. A habit since Class 6, Shiva's life is set to change now. Come June 16, this newspaper-boy-turned-vendor will walk down the corridors of the Indian Institute of Management-Calcutta as a PGP student.
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Indian historical linguistics

It is rare that Johnson is compelled to respond to comments. But my last post, about the fun parallels in the hybrid development of English and Dravidian languages, seems to have stirred the passions of our readers. Many of them commented, dismissing the post as (at best) misguided and (at worst) a piece of neocolonial rubbish. That is a shame. Studying the history of India’s...
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Gatsby's heartbreaker

She was a society girl with a diamond-hard heart and a voice like sweet music. He was a cocky, witty student, with almost feminine looks and no money at all. Their love affair never had a chance — but it inspired America’s greatest romantic novel and now a new film tipped to sweep every awards ceremony: The Great Gatsby. F. Scott Fitzgerald never stopped worshipping Ginevra King, his first love.
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